PainRack wrote: 2024-02-18 11:42pm
The 1PN96MT-02 is ancient technology in comparison. It's range is up to 2 miles-
Yeah I'm well aware of its disadvantages.
This isn't just a range issue. Third gen optics allow you to zoom in, aim and hit faster than the 2nd gen optics like the 1PN96MT-02is.
We see this difference CLEARLY in the Bradley Vs Tank engagement, as the Bushmaster was able to attack faster and more accurately, scoring a mission kill.
There are a million different subjective reasons an engagement can go one way or the other, the idea that it must be because of the Bradley's thermal sight and no other reason has no basis. Newer thermal sights are better yeah, we don't need to assume it what was what happened in here or there memeable online war moment.
(The T-90M mission-killed in that engagement isn't equipped with 1PN96MT-02 anyway.)
Repeatedly claiming the Ukranians have to pressgang people, ban military age men from leaving as signs of their manpower issue however IS misleading when you ignore the Russians did that earlier
Recruitment issues in Ukraine are a persistent, ongoing problem to the extent they are not in Russia. The Russians aren't visibly sacking their entire conscription teams due to widespread corruption, and then realising they made a mistake in doing so because noone else wants the job. That's Ukraine. I don't see Ukraine recruiting hordes of volunteer troops at this stage of the war with generous salaries - that's Russia.
I focus on Ukraine because to treat them as equivalent issues is simply not accurate. Not even General Zaluzhny thinks its accurate, as he complained in his recent essay to CNN.
This goes back to the irresponsibility of analysis of this war to the very beginning - the foolish belief that the Russians would take their licks and go home rather than escalate, that this vastly larger state with far more resources would just walk off and be humiliated rather than mobilise more men if it needs to. That's
still the narrative hiding behind all of this discourse, and its an insanely stupid bet to take, given the stakes.
They went from an average age of 35 to become 40. Meanwhile, Russian forces went from average of 20 yrs old professional soldiers to 35 based on orbituaries.
And as I keep pointing out, Russian 35 yr old is NOT significantly better than Ukranian 43.
Do you think Ukrainian 43 year olds are just that much healthier than Russian 35 year olds? Also who has more men?
Can't be helped if US won't do what in its best interests. Just pointing out the problem isn't with Ukraine manpower limits, it's with Western aid.
It's both. This is again a matter of simply inhabiting reality and acting accordingly, as opposed to recommending a course of action that you could take if wishes were horses and we all lived on Candy Mountain, which is what online Ukraine war advocacy indulges in depressingly often, at this point.
Which is to say - we can quibble why the problem exists and it
does exist so what should someone do about it? If you believe the collective West is gonna funnel everything that Ukraine desires and does so indefinitely, that's one thing, but if you don't believe that, then this is unsustainable.
As for what's in US best interests- supporting a protracted war between Ukraine and Russia is arguably not in US best interests. See the RAND Corporation analysis on this, which argues that a prolonged Russo-Ukrainian war is on balance, not in US interests.
But that IS what's important. You essentially using media reports of unpopularity to say Ukraine won't stomach lowering conscription ages n etcetcetc, while going Russia will tolerate the mobilisation pain necessary to sustain its losses.
That's not actually as clear cut as you think it is, as evidenced by Putin doing his very best to limit the popularity hit from mobilisation.
See above.